If you’re looking for some Facebook writing groups with lots of great writers, here are my favourites.
Tag: author
Terry’s November Watercolour Writing Newsletter

Read the first chapter of The Moon King here
Check out my writing tip videos:
- How to Break into the Publishing Industry
- How Much Time You Need to Spend Promoting Your Novel
- Every Plot Point Must Test Your Character’s Beliefs
- Your Purpose For Writing Determines Everything
- Make Your Novel More Compelling by Using Emotion
Here’s the link to last month’s watercolor newsletter
That’s all this month. Happy Writing!
From Terry!
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Make Your Novel More Compelling by Using Emotion
Every event in your novel is just the news unless your main character has an opinion on it.
- A volcano erupts and kills everyone in town… Okay.
- Your main character’s beloved daughter was in the town when it erupted… Super Sad!
- Your main character had taken out life insurance on his daughter right before she died in the eruption and now he can pay for his wife’s operation… Conflicting!
- Your main character is actually a psychopath and sent his daughter to the town knowing it would erupt… Perfect!
Any event becomes 1000X more dramatic once your main character has an opinion on what is happening.
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Every Plot Point Must Test Your Character’s Beliefs
Writing a Novel?
Using plot points as a way to test and strengthen what your main character believes in will make their development more fulfilling.
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How Much Time You Need to Spend Promoting Your Novel
How many agents have you queried? One?
If it took you a year to write your first novel, then why wouldn’t you spend at least a year promoting it? The writing industry is extremely saturated, so finding an agent or publisher is all about persistence.
Kim Liao even suggests aiming for 100 rejection letters every year, because being persistent enough to get 100 rejections will also lead you on the path to getting an acceptance.
I haven’t found an agent for my first novel yet, but chipping away at that dream every day (47 rejections and counting!).
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Your Villain Is Just the Hero That Succumbed to Her Own Weakness
Having trouble writing your villain?
When I wrote my first novel, I focused so much on building up my main character that I seriously neglected my villain. Turns out my villain was as flat as a board and it seriously impacted my story (not in a good way). It wasn’t until I thought of my villain as the hero of his own story that I was able to make him come to life.
If you’re struggling with writing your villain, maybe this tip will help.
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Three Ways to Improve the Introduction of Your Story
If you’re looking to improve the first few chapters of your novel, here are three impactful ways that I’ve found make my introductions much more compelling.
Happy writing! 🙂
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Terry’s September Newsletter
(here’s the link to last month’s watercolor newsletter)
Here’s the link to my Facebook Page. I also post the videos on my blog here.
Here’s the link to The Simple Test That Will Tell You How Compelling Your First Chapter Is
That’s all this month. Happy Fall!
From Terry!
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The Simple Test That Will Tell You How Compelling Your First Chapter Is
If you think the first chapter of your novel could use some improvement, there’s one simple test that can tell you how to make it better.
Kill the main character at the end of your first chapter.
This will tell you how compelling your first chapter is.
Write something like, “Jim slips off the bridge and falls to his death.”
Now your main character is finished. He can’t achieve any of his goals.
Next, list out all the consequences that come into effect since the main character can’t achieve their goals.
If the list is short and lacklustre, it’s a good sign that your first chapter has room for improvement.
The consequences matters because they give the reader an idea of what’s at stake. The larger the stake, the more compelled your reader will be to find out what happens next.
A great example is Katniss Everdeen from Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games.
Let’s kill her at the start of the novel and see what happens.
“The train to District 1 crashes and Katniss Everdeen dies.”
Now what consequences come into play if Katniss can’t accomplish her main goal?
Main Goal:
- Take her sister’s place in The Hunger Games and survive.
Consequences:
- Primrose will be taken to The Hunger Games instead and Primrose will surely die because she’s young and doesn’t possess any archery skills like Katniss.
- Gale will be heartbroken now that his crush is dead.
- Peeta will be heartbroken now that his crush is dead, plus he’s going to die himself in The Hunger Games without any purpose to live any more.
- Katniss’ mother will likely have a heart attack because Katniss is dead, and now Primrose will be sent to The Hunger Games and die too.
The consequences of Katniss’ death are very high and the reader doesn’t want any of those things to happen. The reader eagerly turns each page to find out what happens next, because Katniss must accomplish her goal above all cost.
A great thing about this test is that you can keep killing your main character at the end of each chapter to see if the consequences are still high enough to keep the reader engaged.
As in The Hunger Games, each chapter proves to test Katniss’ ability to survive and raises the consequences even higher:
- Katniss becomes a symbol of hope to all the Districts, she can’t die!
- Katniss respects Rue’s death, she can’t die, because of the huge emotional pull Katniss’ action has on the reader now.
- Katniss develops conflicting feelings about Gale and Peeta, the reader must know who she chooses.
- etc.
A lot of emerging authors don’t realize that the consequences must be clear from the start. It’s why most first-time novels don’t make it. It’s why mine didn’t.
When I finished my first novel, The Moon King, I used the first few chapters to introduce the setting, characters, and the main character’s goal, but I didn’t spell out the consequences until later chapters.
The initial feedback I got was very telling. It was to the effect of, “The first half is boring and drudges along, but the second half is super exciting and I couldn’t stop reading.”
Now that I’ve learned about building up consequences right away using the “Kill the main character” test, I’m editing my first few chapters to be much more compelling.
If you think that your first chapter could use some improvement, simply kill the main character and list out the consequences that you’ve written about so far.
If there aren’t many, or they aren’t very high, then you may need to do a rewrite.
Here’s a simple template you can use to do the test on your chapters (it’s a downloadable word doc)

Happy writing!
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Terry’s August Newsletter
Here’s another watercolour newsletter this month!

(here’s the link to last month’s newsletter)
Here’s the link to the Writing Excuses podcast.
That’s all this month. Enjoy the rest of the summer.
From Terry!
